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About the Writer

Chef Kurt Michael Friese is editor-in-chief and co-owner of the local food magazine Edible Iowa River Valley. A graduate and former Chef-Instructor at the New England Culinary Institute, he has been owner, with his wife Kim McWane Friese, of the Iowa City restaurant Devotay for 16 years. Named for his children Devon and Taylor, Devotay is a community leader in sustainable cuisine and supporting local farmers and food artisans. Friese is a freelance food writer and photographer as well, with regular columns in 6 local, regional and national newspapers and magazines. His first book, A Cook’s Journey: Slow Food in the Heartland was published by in August, 2008 by Ice Cube Press, and his lates book, Chasing Chiles, was released by Chelsea Green Publishing in March, 2011.

Want to Fund Your Sustainable Food Business Idea? Start Here

What is the one thing that gets in the way of almost every great idea? Money–or the lack of it. Whenever anyone says “it’s not about the money,” it’s probably about the money. Almost everyone I know has a dream business, a dream project, an idea that would be truly fantastic if only they could get it off the ground. If only they had the capital to invest. If only someone would write a guidebook explaining exactly how to raise the dough. Enter: Raising Dough by Elizabeth Ü, a recent Food and Community Policy Fellow at the Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy (IATP), and Executive Director of Finance for Food, a one-woman nonprofit organization that educates food system entrepreneurs.

How’s that for creating your own niche?

These days the demand for local and sustainable food and socially conscious business practices is exploding. Case in point, when we launched Edible Iowa River Valley seven years ago, it was the 19th Edible magazine in the country; today there are over 80 of them. When Slow Food came to Iowa in 2000, it was the 17th chapter in the U.S.; today there are over 230.

It’s been nearly six years since “locavore” was named the Oxford English Dictionary “word of the year,” and the movement has only grown since then. All this momentum has built despite the fact that most people starting food businesses have had very little support or advice about how to get their work off the ground.

Now, thanks to Raising Dough, that’s about to change. A step-by-step roadmap for the budding food entrepreneur, the book starts where it should, at the beginning. It explains financing in layman’s terms, carries the reader through the minutiae of business entities and balance sheets, and helps clarify what values are driving the idea. Ü relies heavily on the work of Woody Tasch and Slow Money–an organization that argues that we should invest “as if food, farms and fertility mattered”–as well as the important efforts of BALLE, the Business Alliance for Local Living Economies (both groups were the author’s past employers).

Both the book and Ü’s consulting work are aimed at helping business owners articulate their values from the get-go, so they can find funding that supports (rather than works against) those values. The goal is to help connect entrepreneurs with capital and expertise–both old-fashioned networking with “angel investors” and the latest crowdsourcing techniques like KickStarter.

Of course there is always the oldest way to finance a business: Debt. I’ve been in the food service industry for 35 years and I know that the best way to make a small fortune in the restaurant business is to start with a large fortune and that the easiest way to hear the word “no” is to walk into a bank and say the word “restaurant.” Raising Dough will also help those on this path find the shortest way to yes, while explaining and avoiding the pitfalls along the way.

Lastly there’s the scariest prospect: Selling equity. To an eager entrepreneur this often sounds like selling out. But there are ways, and Ü lists them, to bring in other owners without selling your soul. She uses the cautionary tale of Unilever’s acquisition of hippy-dippy ice cream icon Ben & Jerry’s to illustrate exactly where a road paved with good intentions can lead. Sure, they made a ton of cash in the sale (the Anglo-Dutch conglomerate bought the Vermont company for a cool $326 Million in 2000), but at the cost of many of the progressive values upon which founders Ben Cohen and Jerry Greenfield built the company.

So, how exactly does one use a business to save the world without selling out?

“Clarify your values” – It’s hard to avoid selling out your values if you’re not crystal clear about what they are.

Maintain rock-solid bookkeeping and learn how to understand what the numbers are telling you. When something is going wrong, this is where you’ll see it first.

This list is just the tip of the iceberg. And watch out; Raising Dough isn’t just about the theory behind sustainable fundraising. If you’ve had a dream project in mind, this book might just inspire you to make it a reality.

It is nice to enjoy a well written review on a book and topic important to my world. Thanks to Kurt Friese and Elizabeth U, the complex movement to create a food system capable of supporting health and resilience will gain more momentum. Both Kurt and Elizabeth are serious students of enterprises that do well by doing good for food, farmers and eaters. I am now compelled to buy and read the book and I congratulate Elizabeth on an effort well done and well received!